Extrachromosomal DNA-Driven Oncogene Dosage Heterogeneity Promotes Rapid Adaptation to Therapy in MYCN-Amplified Cancers
Extrachromosomal DNA-Driven Oncogene Dosage Heterogeneity Promotes Rapid Adaptation to Therapy in MYCN-Amplified Cancers

Extrachromosomal DNA-Driven Oncogene Dosage Heterogeneity Promotes Rapid Adaptation to Therapy in MYCN-Amplified Cancers

Cancer Discov. 2025 Aug 7:OF1-OF24. doi: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-24-1738. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

Extrachromosomal DNA (ecDNA) amplification enhances intercellular oncogene dosage variability and accelerates tumor evolution by violating foundational principles of genetic inheritance through its asymmetric mitotic segregation. Spotlighting high-risk neuroblastoma, we demonstrate how ecDNA amplification undermines the clinical efficacy of current therapies in cancers with extrachromosomal MYCN amplification. Integrating theoretical models of oncogene copy number-dependent fitness with single-cell ecDNA quantification and phenotype analyses, we reveal that ecDNA copy-number heterogeneity drives phenotypic diversity and determines treatment sensitivity through mechanisms unattainable by chromosomal oncogene amplification. We demonstrate that ecDNA copy number directly influences cell fate decisions in cancer cell lines, patient-derived xenografts, and primary neuroblastomas, illustrating how extrachromosomal oncogene dosage-driven phenotypic diversity offers a strong evolutionary advantage under therapeutic pressure. Furthermore, we identify senescent cells with reduced ecDNA copy numbers as a source of treatment resistance in neuroblastomas and outline a strategy for their targeted elimination to improve the treatment of MYCN-amplified cancers.

SIGNIFICANCE: ecDNA-driven tumor genome evolution provides a major challenge to curative cancer therapies. We demonstrate that ecDNA copy-number dynamics drives treatment resistance by promoting oncogene dosage-dependent phenotypic heterogeneity in MYCN-amplified cancers. Exploiting phenotype-specific vulnerabilities of ecDNA cells, therefore, presents a powerful strategy to overcome treatment resistance. See related article by Korsah, p. XX.

PMID:40773595 | DOI:10.1158/2159-8290.CD-24-1738